City of Fairview, Oklahoma, and Dean Ranson, City Treasurer of Fairview, Oklahoma v. Ash Norris

234 F.2d 199, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 3687
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMay 18, 1956
Docket5260_1
StatusPublished

This text of 234 F.2d 199 (City of Fairview, Oklahoma, and Dean Ranson, City Treasurer of Fairview, Oklahoma v. Ash Norris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Fairview, Oklahoma, and Dean Ranson, City Treasurer of Fairview, Oklahoma v. Ash Norris, 234 F.2d 199, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 3687 (10th Cir. 1956).

Opinion

HUXMAN, Circuit Judge.

In 1939 a class action was filed in the District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma by the City of Fairview, Oklahoma, on relation of a holder of Paving District No. 7 bonds to foreclose delinquent assessments in order to provide a fund for payment of outstanding bonds of the paving district. The suit set out a number of causes of action, and judgments were rendered at various times in 1941 against the specific properties for the respective amounts due.

The City Clerk, J. C. Nicholson, and City Treasurer, J. W. A. Prescott, of Fairview, Oklahoma, were joined as party defendants in the suit, to enforce the duties incumbent upon those officials to register and receive the funds and to pay off the outstanding bonds. Each of the judgments contained a provision requiring the City Treasurer to pay the outstanding bonds in their regular numerical order, as funds became available, and subjecting him to citation for contempt in the event of a failure to perform the required duties. The judgment rendered on February 27, 1941, is set out in the record, and in this regard states:

“and the sums so received by the City Treasurer shall be placed in the special separate fund for the retirement of the bonds and interest coupons issued in said district, and said City Treasurer shall first pay all outstanding and unpaid interest coupons, * * * and shall thereafter, as funds are available therefor, pay all outstanding and unpaid street improvement bonds in said district, or the participation certificates issued in lieu of said bonds, all in their regular numerical order, together with interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent (10%) per an-num from maturity to date of payment as provided * * *.
“It is further ordered that in the event the said public officials above mentioned or either of them shall fail to perform the acts and duties hereby required of them, within the time or times hereinabove provided, they, or either of them shall be subject to citation to appear and show cause why they should not be punished for their contempt for their failure to comply with the provisions of this judgment and decree * * «"

The case was submitted upon stipulated facts. These paving bonds are bearer bonds, transferrable by delivery only. The controversy at bar centers around one unpaid bond, Bond No. 10, which *202 was first presented for-payment in October 1954. It is agreed that funds became available for the payment of Bond No. 10 on December 24, 1940. At that time the total principal, coupons, and post-maturity interest due amounted to $633. Notice was given by the City Treasurer to the last known holder of Bond No. 10 to present it for payment, but the bond was not presented for payment. The City Treasurer took no steps to determine the whereabouts of the owner of the bond, and he did not deposit the funds for the payment of Bond No. 10 with the clerk of the court or segregate the funds to await presentment. Instead, at some subsequent time the City. Treasurer used the funds to pay the next bond of higher numerical order. And as funds continued to accumulate this payment of higher numerical order bonds continued through Bond 21, apparently the last' outstanding bond except for Bond No. 10 and a participation certificate on Bond No. 8 in the amount of $30.26 which likewise was never presented for payment. In 1945, after the payment of Bond. No. 21, there was on hand the sum of $372.89. In December, 1952 the City Council of Fairview by resolution directed a transfer of that balance to the Street and Alley Repair Fund of the city.

Thereafter, in October, 1954, Bond No. 10 was presented by Ash Norris, the owner thereof, to the then City Treasurer for payment, and payment was refused. Norris then filed in the District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma this application to require the incumbent City Treasurer of Fairview, Dean Ranson, to comply with the terms and provisions of the judgments rendered in .the 1939 action. Relief .was asked against the City Treasurer and the City of Fairview for a restoration of the allegedly wrongly converted funds and for payment of the $633 due on Bond No. 10. The trial judge entertained the application and rendered judgment that the $372.89 be. reconveyed to the Paving Bond account and that the City Treasurer, Dean Ranson, and the City of Fair-view were liable for the full $633 on the bond.

• For reasons which shall presently appear, we are of the view that the personal judgment against the present City Treasurer, Dean Ranson, cannot stand and that the judgment against the City of Fairview in excess of $372.89 must likewise be set aside.

The applicable Oklahoma Statutes 1 make the City Treasurer the custodian to receive funds paid in discharge of special improvement assessments.and distribute them to the bondholders as required by law. J. W. A. Prescott was the City Treasurer at the time the original judgment was entered in the Federal court. The judgment was directed to him and he was the one originally liable to citation for contempt if he failed to comply with its provisions. In 1945 J. E. Bomgardner was City Treasurer and in 1952, when the City resolution directing the City Treasurer to transfer the balance of $372.89 in the fund to the Street and Alley Repair Fund, Jesse Sutton was the City Treasurer, and it was he who transferred the funds. 2 In’ October,- 1954 when Bond No. 10 was’finally presented for payment, appellant Dean Ranson was the City Treasurer and refused payment because the fund had been transferred and no funds were on hand. We then have a situation where these funds were transferred by a predecessor of the present City Treasurer, Dean Ranson, the defendant below. • •

The City Treasurer in' 1952, Jesse Sutton, held these funds as trustee for the bondholders. So long as there were bonds outstanding 1 it was his duty to hold the funds for thosé -to whom they belonged. The City liad no lawful authority to require him to transfer them, and he violated his fiduciary responsibility in complying with the demand of -the City.

*203 The law is without exception that a trustee is not liable to a beneficiary for a breach of trust committed by a predecessor trustee. 3 Since a violation of the trust relationship was committed by a predecessor city treasurer, Dean Ranson could not be cited for contempt of court. Neither could a personal judgment be rendered against him for acts of misfeasance by a predecessor. It also follows that since the fund was in the possession of the City prior to the time- Ranson became City Treasurer he could not respond to the order of the court directing him to retransfer the $372.89 without an order from the City which now has the fund.

While there are some confusing statements in the Oklahoma decisions, a careful perusal thereof makes it clear that the Treasurer and not the City stands in the relationship of a trustee to the bondholders, 4 and the City is not liable for the misfeasance of the bondholder’s agent merely because he is also a city employee.

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Bluebook (online)
234 F.2d 199, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 3687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-fairview-oklahoma-and-dean-ranson-city-treasurer-of-fairview-ca10-1956.